19. Sport and Leisure

(Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive
bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities,
compiled by Michael Flood. 19th edition, 2008. Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/)

a) Men, sport and leisure

Note: Messner and Sabo's Sex, Violence and Power in
Sports, their Sport, Men and the Gender Order, McKay et al.'s Masculinities,
Gender Relations, and Sport, and Messner's Taking the Field are in many ways
the best places to start in the literature in this area.

Adair, Daryl et.al. (1998). Playing Fields Through to Battle Fields: The Development
of Australian Sporting Manhood in its Imperial Context, circa 1850-1918. Journal
of Australian Studies, No. 56

Adams, Mary Louise. (1993). To Be an Ordinary Hero: Male Figure Skaters and
the Ideology of Gender. In Haddad, Tony. (ed.). Men and Masculinities: A Critical
Anthology. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Burgess, Ian, Allan Edwards, and James Skinner. (2003). Football Culture in
an Australian School Setting: The Construction of Masculine Identity. Sport,
Education and Society, Volume 8 Number 2, October, pp. 199-212.

Burstyn, Varda. (1999). The Rites of Men: Manhood, Politics, and the Culture
of Sport. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Butterworth, M.L. (2006). Pitchers and Catchers: Mike Piazza and the Discourse
of Gay Identity in the National Pastime. Journal of Sport and Social Issues,
30(2): 138-157.

Clayton, Ben, and John Harris. (2004). Footballers’ wives: The role of
the soccer player’s partner in the construction of idealized masculinity.
Soccer and Society, Volume 5, Number 3, Autumn, pp. 317-335.

Connell, R.W. (1983). Men’s Bodies. In Which Way is Up? Essays on Sex,
Class and Culture. Sydney: George Allen & Unwin

Drummond, Murray. (1994). Masculinity from a Feminist Perspective: or How Feminism
Helped Create the New Man. Issues in Educational Research. Vol 4 number 2.

Drummond, Murray. (1998). The Social Construction of Masculinity in Sport:
An Australian Surf Lifesaving Perspective. South African Journal for Research
in Sport, Physical Education and Recreation. Vol 20, number 2.

Drummond, Murray. (2001). Boys’ Bodies in the Context of Sport and Physical
Activity: Implications for Health. Journal of Physical Education New Zealand.
34(1), May

Drummond, Murray. (2002). Sport and Images of Masculinity: The Meaning of Relationships
in the Life Course of ‘Elite’ Male Athletes. Journal of Men’s
Studies, 10(2), Winter.

Duncan, M.C. (1990). Sports Photographs and Sexual Difference: Images of Women
and Men in the 1984 and 1988. Olympics. Sociology of Sport Journal, 7.

Dundes, Alan, and Howard F. Stein. (1985). The American Game of ‘Smear
the Queer’ and the Homosexual Component of Male Competitive Sport and
Warfare. Journal of Psychoanalytic Anthropology, 8(3), Summer.

Dunning, Eric. (1986). Sport as a Male Preserve: Notes on the Social Sources
of Masculine Identity and its Transformations. Theory, Culture and Society,
3(1) .

Duquin, M. (1984). Power and Authority: Moral Consensus and Conformity in Sport.
International Review for Sociology of Sport, 19(3/4).

Enquist, Per Olov. (1995). A Man’s Role on the Sports Stage. In Ministry
of Health and Social Affairs (Equality Affairs Division), Sweden. (eds.). Men
on Men: Eight Swedish Men’s Personal Views on Equality, Masculinity and
Parenthood, Sweden (trans. David Canter and Rebecka Charan).

Evers, C. (2006). How to surf. Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 30(3): 229-243.

Gard, Michael. (2001). ‘I Like Smashing People, and I Like Getting Smashed
Myself’: Addressing Issues of Masculinity in Physical Education and Sport.
In Martino, Wayne and Bob Meyenn. (eds.). What About the Boys? Issues of Masculinity
in Schools. Buckingham & Philadelphia: Open University Press

Grundy, Pamela. (2001). The Fire of Rivalry: Men’s College Athletics,
1880-1901. pp. 10-39; IN:; Learning to Win: Sports, Education, and Social Change
in Twentieth-Century North Carolina. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press.

Hemphill, Dennis (ed). (1998). All Part of the Game: Violence and Australian
Sport.
Contents;
Martin Crotty: ‘There’s a Tumult in the Distance and a War-Song
in the Air: Violence and Sport in the Australian Public School of the Late Nineteenth
and Early Twentieth Century.’
Brett Hutchins: ‘Sporting Violence: History, Theory, Context and Figurations.’
Roy Hay: ‘A New Look at Soccer Violence.’
Roy Hay and Ian Warren: ‘Order and Disorder at Sporting Venues.’
Ian Warren: ‘Violence, Sport and the Law: A Critical Discussion.’
Michael Burke: ‘Is Boxing Violent? Let’s Ask Some Boxers.’
Baydon Beddoe: ‘In the Fight: Phenomenology of a Pugilist.’
Margaret Lindley: ‘Her Beauty and Her Terror: Australian Football and
the Community.’
Dennis Hemphill: ‘It’s All Part of Whose Game? A Violence and Sport
Commentary.’
Rob Hess: ‘Violence and Sport: Selected Bibliography’.

Hughson, J. (2000). The Boys are Back in Town: Soccer Support and the Social
Reproduction of Masculinity. Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 24(1): 8-23.

Hughson, John. (2000). The Boys are Back in Town: Soccer Support and the Social
Reproduction of Masculinity. Journal of Sport and Social Issues. Vol. 24, No.
1, February, pp. 8-23.

Hutchins, B., and J. Mikosza. (1998). Australian rugby league and violence
1970 to 1995: A case study in the maintenance of masculine hegemony. Australian
and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, v.34 no.3 Nov: 246-263.

Kusz, K. W. (2001). “I Want to be the Minority”: The Politics of
Youthful White Masculinities in Sport and Popular Culture in 1990s America.
Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 25(4): 390-416.

Kusz, Kyle W. (2001). ‘I Want to Be the Minority’: The Politics
of Youthful White Masculinities in Sport and Popular Culture in 1990s America.
Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 25(4), November, pp. 390-416.

Laberge, S., and M. Albert. (1999). Conceptions of Masculinity and of Gender
Transgressions in Sport among Adolescent Boys: Hegemony, Contestation, and Social
Class Dynamic. Men and Masculinities, 1(3): 243-267.

Laitinen, Arja, and Arto Tiihonen. (1990). Narratives of Men’s Experiences
in Sport. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 25(3).

Laurendeau, J. (2004). The “crack choir” and the “cock chorus”:
The intersection of gender and sexuality in skydiving texts. Sociology Of Sport
Journal, 21 (4): 397-417.

Mason, Gay. (1992). Looking Into Masculinity: Sport, Media and the Construction
of the Male Body Beautiful. Social Alternatives, 11(1)

McDevitt, Patrick F. (2004). May the Best Man Win: Sport, Masculinity, and
Nationalism in Great Britain and the Empire, 1880-1935.

McDowell, Deborah E. (1997). Pecs and Reps: Muscling in on Race and the Subject
of Masculinities. In Stecopoulos, Harry and Uebel, Michael. (eds.). Race and
the Subject of Masculinities, Duke University Press.

McGuire, B., K. Monks, and R. Halsall. (2001). Young Asian Males: Social Exclusion
and Social Injustice in British Professional Football? Culture, Sport, Society,
Volume 4, Number 3, Fall, pp. 65-80.

McKay, Jim, and David Rowe. (1997). Field of Soaps: Rupert v. Kerry as Masculine
Melodrama. Social Text, 15(1), Spring

McKay, Jim, and Iain Middlemiss. (1995). ‘Mate Against Mate, State Against
State’: A Case Study of Media Constructions of Hegemonic Masculinity in
Australian Sport. Masculinities, 3(3), Fall

McKay, Jim. (1991). Masculine Hegemony and the Social Construction of Genders.
pp. 52-56 in No Pain, No Gain? Sport and Australian Culture. Sydney: Prentice
Hall

McKay, Jim. (1991). Phallic Panic in the Media: Sporting Women and Hysterical
Men. Paper to the Research on Masculinity and Men in Gender Relations Conference,
Australian Sociological Association, Macquarie University, 7-8 June

Messner, Michael A. (1986). Masculinity and Sports: An Exploration of the Changing
Meaning of Male Identity in the Lifecourse of the Athlete. Dissertation Abstracts
International, 46(9), March.

Messner, Michael A. (1987a). The Meaning of Success: The Athletic Experience
and the Development of Male Identity. In Brod, Harry. (ed.). The Making of Masculinities:
The New Men’s Studies. Boston: Allen & Unwin

Messner, Michael A. (1987b). The Life of a Man’s Seasons: Male Identity
in the Life Course of the Jock. In Kimmel, Michael. (ed). (1987). Changing Men:
New Directions in Research on Men and Masculinity. New York: Sage

Oates, Thomas, and Meenakshi Gigi Durham. (2004). The mismeasure of masculinity:
The male body, ‘race’ and power in the enumerative discourses of
the NFL Draft. Patterns of Prejudice, Volume 38, Number 3, September, pp. 301-320.

Oriard, Michael. (1993). Reading Football: How the Popular Press Created an
American Spectacle. University of North Carolina Press.

Robins, G., D. Lusher, and P. Kremer. (2005). Masculine behaviour and social
networks in team structures. AFL Research and Development Project. Melbourne:
University of Melbourne, AFL, and Deakin University.

Salisbury, Jonathon, and David Jackson. (1996). School Sport and the Making
of Boys and Men. Chapter 9 in Challenging Macho Values: Practical Ways of Working
with Adolescent Boys. London: Falmer Press.

Stempel, C. (2006). Televised Sports, Masculinist Moral Capital, and Support
for the U. S. Invasion of Iraq. Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 30(1): 79.

Swain, J. (2000). ‘The Money’s Good, The Fame’s Good, The
Girls are Good’: The Role of Playground Football in the Construction of
Young Boys’ Masculinity in a Junior School. British Journal of Sociology
of Education. 21(1):95-109, Mar.

Walker, Linley. (1999). Hydraulic Sexuality and Hegemonic Masculinity: Young
Working-Class Men and Car Culture. In White, R. ed. Australian Youth Subcultures:
On the Margins and in the Mainstream. Hobart, Tas: Australian Clearinghouse
for Youth Studies, pp. 178-187.

Webb, John. (1998). Sport. In Junk Male. Sydney: HarperCollins

Wedgwood, Nikki. (1997). ‘Spewin’, Mate!’ - A Day at the
Cricket. Social Alternatives, 16(3) July.

Crawley, S. L. (1998). Gender, class and the construction of masculinity in
professional sailing: A Case Study of the America3 Women’s Team. International
Review for the Sociology of Sport, 33(1): 33-42.

International Journal of the History of Sport
International Review for the Sociology of Sport
Journal of Sport and Social Issues
Play and Culture
Sociology of Sport Journal
Sport, Education and Society

(c)
Sport and violence against women

AFL (Australian Football League). (2005). Respect & Responsibility: Creating
a safe and inclusive environment for women at all levels of Australian Football.
Melbourne: Australian Football League, November.

Gard, Michael. (2001). ‘I Like Smashing People, and I Like Getting Smashed
Myself’: Addressing Issues of Masculinity in Physical Education and Sport.
In Martino, Wayne and Bob Meyenn. (eds.). What About the Boys? Issues of Masculinity
in Schools. Buckingham & Philadelphia: Open University Press

Hemphill, Dennis (ed). (1998). All Part of the Game: Violence and Australian
Sport.

Hutchins, B., and J. Mikosza. (1998). Australian rugby league and violence
1970 to 1995: A case study in the maintenance of masculine hegemony. Australian
and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, v.34 no.3 Nov: 246-263.

Leonard, D. J. (2007). Innocent Until Proven Innocent: In Defense of Duke Lacrosse
and White Power (and Against Menacing Black Student-Athletes, a Black Stripper,
Activists, and the Jewish Media). Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 31(1):
25-44.

Waterhouse-Watson, D. (2008). All Women Are Sluts: Australian Rules Football
and Representations of the Feminine. Australian Feminist Law Journal, 27(2):
155-162.

Welch, Michael. (1997). Violence against women by professional football players:
A gender analysis of hypermasculinity, positional status, narcissism, and entitlement.
Journal of Sport and Social Issues, November, Vol. 21, Iss. 4.